xenopeek wrote:
All other editions of Linux Mint 18.x just use the Ubuntu repositories for installing and updating KDE packages.

Does this mean that although I am using Linux Mint I'll still be able to use Kmymoney if it remains available in the correct Ubuntu series repositories? Which hopefully would also provide access to the needed dependencies?

The only change is that there won't be an ISO file with a Linux Mint KDE installer after Linux Mint 18.3. There is no change in what KDE software and packages are available on Linux Mint, now or in the future.

xenopeek wrote:The only change is that there won't be an ISO file with a Linux Mint KDE installer after Linux Mint 18.3. There is no change in what KDE software and packages are available on Linux Mint, now or in the future.

xenopeek wrote:To be clear, there still will be a 18.3 KDE release but that will indeed be the last one—e.g., Linux Mint 19 won't have a KDE edition, though you can still quite easily install KDE on top of it.

SuperSapien wrote:OK how do we install KDE on top of lets say Cinnamon?

As noted earlier in this topic by one of the Cinnamon developers, he recommends you installed KDE on top of MATE or Xfce. Cinnamon and KDE might butt heads.

Around the release of Linux Mint 19 I'll write a guide on how to cleanly add KDE on top of Linux Mint 19 Xfce—choosing Xfce as that has the smallest footprint and is easiest to remove if one would want to make it KDE only.

SuperSapien wrote:OK how do we install KDE on top of lets say Cinnamon?

As noted earlier in this topic by one of the Cinnamon developers, he recommends you installed KDE on top of MATE or Xfce. Cinnamon and KDE might butt heads.

Around the release of Linux Mint 19 I'll write a guide on how to cleanly add KDE on top of Linux Mint 19 Xfce—choosing Xfce as that has the smallest footprint and is easiest to remove if one would want to make it KDE only.

One more question will this guide also show us how to replace all of the XFCE apps with KDE ones such as Dolphin?

Why in the flying FRAK would anyone want to continue to support a distro that does not want to support their preferred DE???

It's ridiculous.

When my 18.2 KDE goes EOL I will happily jump ship. I already went back to Ubuntu from Mint once because no one here could solve the problem I was having. I won't hesitate to do it again. Or maybe Neon.

Same as the other Linux Mint 18.x releases: you'll receive updates till April 2021. However, the maintainers of the KDE packages in the Ubuntu/Kubuntu repositories provide support only till April 2019 (source: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/XenialXerus/Rel ... t_lifespan). How big of an issue it is for you that KDE packages will receive no updates after April 2019 will determine if that is the end date for you or April 2021.

Jim Hauser wrote:And have any tutorials been posted on how to us Mate or XFCE as a base for a "hybrid" KDE? I really like using activities if that will be possible.

There's no urgency as we still have Linux Mint 18.3 KDE on the horizon but for sure, if there is interest, I'll be happy to do a guide on how to properly install KDE on Linux Mint 19 Xfce and optionally remove Xfce afterwards. To be done around the release of Linux Mint 19.

Jim Hauser wrote:I'll be happy to do a guide on how to properly install KDE on Linux Mint 19 Xfce and optionally remove Xfce afterwards. To be done around the release of Linux Mint 19.

That would be splendid. If possible, could you find out and perhaps detail how the Mint team avoid or reduce full screen video lag when another application is started and a compositor is active? I've had no end of trouble with video lag when starting another application on every other distro I've tried, yet it runs perfectly on Mint. To avoid the lag I have to turn off compositing but that creates ugly screen artifacts.

xenopeek wrote:
There's no urgency as we still have Linux Mint 18.3 KDE on the horizon but for sure, if there is interest, I'll be happy to do a guide on how to properly install KDE on Linux Mint 19 Xfce and optionally remove Xfce afterwards. To be done around the release of Linux Mint 19.

I will be glad to vote for the guide to create a sudo LM 19 KDE. (pun intended).

Whether or not I personally use or even like KDE, it is my belief that competition and alternatives are normally a very good thing. GNU+Linux by definition gives users the greatest possible amount of flexibility through both enabling them to do what they want, and simultaneously not actively preventing them from doing what they want. Otherwise, the moment a distro said "No more XYZ desktop environment" the users would have absolutely no alternatives but to use what was still supported, or abandon that distro in favor of another one.

The fact that one can add whatever desktop environment one wants to whatever existing, in-place distro they are using serves the double benefit, in my view, of allowing that distro's maintainers to only have to focus on what they need to really worry about that is distro-specific, instead of contending with other, outside distractions.

Peoples of the universe, please attend carefully: the message which follows is vital to the future of you all.

phd21 wrote:Hi "xenopeek", and all the Linux Mint Developers,
...
Of the various KDE operating systems, which one(s) do you and other Linux Mint developers recommend? Kubuntu, OpenSUSE, Neon, etc...?
...

Thank you again to all Linux Mint developers and maintainers for these wonderful free computer operating systems.

First, ditto on that last item. It had/has to be a bear to keep up with kde.

I immediately started wondering what he's thinking the moment I read the news.

He's going to say he was right."But what happens when GIMP is decided to be be too techie for it to be included in Mint? Or K3B? Or X-Sane? Or the whole of KDE? ("Too many config options. Users will get confused...)"

kimba wrote:But what happens when GIMP is decided to be be too techie for it to be included in Mint? Or K3B? Or X-Sane? Or the whole of KDE?

If not installed by default, all of these are available for easy installation from the package base repositories used on Linux Mint and LMDE. What software is installed by default by the Linux Mint installer ISO doesn't affect what further software is available for installation on Linux Mint. Retiring a Linux Mint ISO doesn't change what is in the Ubuntu or Debian package base repositories.